Research Description

My main research interests concern the neural correlates of affective-cognitive interactions in healthy and clinical populations, as studied with brain imaging techniques (e.g., fMRI and ERP). My program can be divided into the following two main directions: 1. BASIC RESEARCH investigating the neural mechanisms underlying the impact of emotion on cognition in healthy participants. This direction focuses on identifying the mechanisms that are common to both the enhancing and the impairing effects of emotion on cognitive functions (e.g., enhanced memory for emotional events and enhanced susceptibility to emotional distraction, respectively), and on identifying the mechanisms that dissociate these two opposing effects of emotion on cognition. 2. TRANSLATIONAL RESEARCH investigating the role of individual differences in mediating the emotion-cognition interactions. This direction focuses on identifying the neural circuitry responsible for differential ability to experience, remember, and regulate emotions associated with age-, gender-, and personality-related differences, in both healthy and clinical cohorts. We investigate these issues using brain imaging methods (fMRI, ERP) in conjunction with other psychophysiological (electrodermal responses) and behavioral assessments (performance in cognitive and neuropsychological tasks, personality questionnaires).Investigation of these issues has direct implications for understanding the neural correlates of affective dysregulation observed in mood and anxiety disorders, which are characterized by pathological biases in processing negative emotions, intrusive recollection of distressing events, and increased emotional distractibility.

Distinctions / Awards

Laird Cermak Award for Early Contributions to Memory Research from the Memory Disorders Research Society.

Young Investigator Award from the National Alliance for Research on Schizophrenia and Depression.

CPRF Award from the Canadian Psychiatric Research Foundation.

NSERC Post-Doctoral Fellowship from the Natural Sciences & Engineering Research Council of Canada.

Dolcos, F., LaBar, K.S., & Cabeza, R. (2005). Remembering One Year Later: Role of the Amygdala and the Medial Temporal Lobe Memory System During Retrieval of Emotional Memories. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, USA, 102(7), 2626-2631.

Sections

Facilities Information

The project to reroof the Psychology Building will begin on March 22, at the start of spring break.
The BIKE AREA will close earlier in March to allow for staging.
The ATRIUM will be closed for two weeks starting on March 22.